Posts Tagged ‘press brake’

Fabricators scream for the skilled worker

August 21st, 2012
By: Tim Heston

Last week I called a manager of a heavy fabrication operation. We chatted briefly, but after a few minutes he had to go. He told me six of his operators hadn’t shown up that morning, so shop managers were scrambling.

Then I saw a headline on the front page of the Sunday New York Times: “Skilled work, without the worker: New wave of deft robots is changing global industry.”

Industry leaders continue to scream for good people, those with good attitudes, work ethic, and (ideally) technical aptitude. Sometimes, managers are just looking for people who actually show up. Meanwhile, mass media conveys the idea that robots are taking over the modern factory. No wonder manufacturing has trouble attracting enough people.

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Fabricating the American Dream

May 29th, 2012
By: Tim Heston

Many are rethinking the American Dream these days, especially over Memorial Day. The dream, however idealistic, is worth fighting for. But what is that dream, exactly? National Public Radio’s Ari Shapiro put it this way: “Though the phrase has different meanings to different people, it suggests an underlying belief that hard work pays off, and that the next generation will have a better life than the previous generation.”

He added that the notion is uniquely American. Although we don’t feel people are entitled to success, we feel that hard work and playing by the rules should lead us to something better than our parents had. Success, we feel, is within our control.

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The power of predictability

October 25th, 2010
By: Tim Heston

Several years ago Doug Gardner, president of Johnson City, N.Y.-based Hi-Tech Industries of New York, landed what’s increasingly rare today for fabricators: a multiyear contract. The shop’s Amada Pulsar 2-kW laser ran 24 hours a day and just couldn’t keep up, Gardner said, adding that the machine took 90 hours to process 2,000 pieces.

Gardner then got a new laser, the Amada LC-3015 F1 NT, a 4-kW system that could cut those 2,000 pieces in 21 hours. Later the shop installed a robotized press brake, an Amada Astro 100NT system that changes out specialized press brake tools quickly. The machine tool fits very well with another large contract from a customer who produces four units a week, and Hi-Tech Industries churns out 150 different components for each unit.

He pointed to one extremely complex component: a toaster-size stainless steel filter requiring 13 bends. The robotized press brake needs about 15 minutes to set up for this.

After talking with Gardner last week, I heard that earnestness and excitement so common among small-business owners. You can tell this guy loves machines and he loves his business. But under his enthusiasm is a pragmatic businessman. He didn’t buy machine tools just to get fast processing times. Fast cutting alone won’t make a business more profitable. If a shop owner buys a fancy new laser, and it just floods the floor with work-in-process and shoves insurmountable bottlenecks downstream, the company probably isn’t getting as much as it could out of a sizable investment.

His reasons for the technology investment could be boiled down to three areas, each directly related to the other: manufacturing predictability, flexibility, and inventory reduction.

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President Obama and the Stamping Press

June 8th, 2010
By: Tim Heston

Business owners in the metal fabrication industry are getting to be old hands at hosting top dogs from Washington on both sides of the political aisle. Several years ago President Bush visited Fox Valley Metal-Tech in Green Bay, Wis., and gave a speech. Last year Vice President Joe Biden visited Impulse Manufacturing near the North Georgia Mountains and made a speech. Then last month President Obama visited Industrial Support Inc., a contract metal fabricator and stamper in Buffalo, N.Y.—and, yes, made a speech. It was great watching the president talk with a 45-ton Niagara stamping press just behind him.

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